Delhi Town Hall
Pylon in-front of the Town Hall
Map
General information
TypeTown hall
Architectural styleVictorian architecture, Edwardian architecture
LocationDelhi
India
Coordinates28°39′26″N 77°13′39″E / 28.657286°N 77.227492°E / 28.657286; 77.227492
Construction started1860
Completed1863
Cost1.35 lakh (equivalent to 6.2 crore or US$730,000 in 2023)
OwnerMunicipal Corporation of Delhi
Technical details
Floor count2

The Delhi Town Hall is a landmark building, at Chandni Chowk in Old Delhi. It was the seat of the Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) from 1866 during the British Raj till late 2009, when offices shifted to the new MCD Civic Centre on Minto Road in Central Delhi formally inaugurated in 2010. Architecturally it is a grand Victorian/Edwardian-style structure with a yellow-painted brick and stone mansion with carved white-stone trim. It is officially protected as a high-grade heritage building. In the 21st century, however, the Town Hall has fallen largely into disuse and become dilapidated, prompting repeated restoration and adaptive-reuse proposals as a museum, heritage hotel, etc., by the municipal government.

History

[edit]
Polling station at Town Hall, Delhi in 1952

The Delhi Town Hall building was constructed in the aftermath of the 1857 Rebellion, when the British rebuilt many institutions in Delhi. Foundation for the project was laid in 1860 and construction finished three years later.[1][2] Its original name was the Lawrence Institute of Educational and Cultural Affairs (often simply Lawrence Institute) is a British-era cultural complex that contained a museum, a reading room, a library and meeting rooms for the European community.[3][4] Historian Swapna Liddle notes that Delhi hall is "one important centre for cultural and modern intellectual pursuits" in post-1857 Delhi was this Lawrence Institute.[5] In 1866 Delhi’s municipality bought the Lawrence Institute for 1.35 lakh (equivalent to 6.2 crore or US$730,000 in 2023), renaming it the Town Hall and converting it into the headquarters for civic administration.

During the late 19th and early 20th centuries, Town Hall served as the city’s main municipal office. It also continued to house the European Club and library that had been part of the Lawrence Institute, while new municipal offices and committee rooms occupied other parts of the building. The building survived major earthquakes in 1905 and 1952 with some damage, and was repaired thereafter. Originally a bronze statue of Queen Victoria stood in front of the Town Hall, signifying colonial rule. After independence this statue was removed and replaced by one of Swami Shraddhanand, an Arya Samaj leader.[6] The original statue now stand in Delhi College of Art premises.[7]

After India’s independence, the Town Hall remained the centre of Delhi’s municipal government. The Delhi Municipal Corporation Act (1957) created a unified Municipal Corporation of Delhi (MCD) to administer the city, and Town Hall continued as its headquarters.[8][1] In 1947, the municipal council chamber there was inaugurated; a quotation from Mahatma Gandhi on the privilege of being a municipal councillor (unveiled by Sardar Patel in 1950) was engraved on the chamber’s outer wall.[5]

In the early 21st century, however, Delhi’s municipal administration outgrew the historic building. Following the bifurcation and later trifurcation of the Municipal Corporation in 2012, the North, South and East Delhi Municipal Corporations jointly decided to move their offices to new premises. The 28-storey Shyama Prasad Mukherjee Civic Centre on Minto Road (Central Delhi) opened in 2010 as the modern headquarters for the unified MCD.After this, Town Hall ceased to function as an administrative office. It has stood largely vacant since about 2012. Occasionally it has been used for minor civic purposes (for example, as an “election work” office), but by the mid-2020s it had no permanent public function.[5][8]

Architecture

[edit]

The Town Hall is a distinguished example of colonial-period civic architecture in Delhi. It is a two-storey stuccoed masonry building, built of yellow-painted brick and stone with white carved stone.[9] Its overall design combines Victorian and Edwardian elements, heavy British urban styles of the late 19th century with some local (Mughal-inspired) landscaping.[6] The exterior walls are bright yellow with white pillars, arches and cornices. Two broad porticos flank the front façade.[10] According to The Times of India, the building was "erected in 1863 in brick and stone, painted yellow and white". It covers a large area: the central block plus two wings (east and west) comprise some 13,735 square metres of floor space,[11] and the entire site (including grounds and gardens) spans roughly 16 acreshindustantimes.com.

The front of the Town Hall originally faced the Chowk Bazaar area. The grounds include formal gardens on the south side (toward Chandni Chowk) and north side, laid out in a Mughal influenced style. The south garden features an octagonal fountain basin with a long alley of fountains leading to it. These gardens once belonged to Princess Jahanara, daughter of Shah Jahan. A circular stone pedestal in one of the courtyards holds a statue of Mahatma Gandhi atop a pillar, with inscriptions in English, Hindi and Urdu on the pedestal encourage his ideals of self-reliance and are meant to commemorate Gandhi’s legacy.[9]

In the 1860s the British erected a 130-foot clock tower next to the Town Hall, known as the Northbrook Tower (or simply Ghantaghar) after the Viceroy Lord Northbrook.[4] This tall tower became an Old Delhi landmark. However, in 1951 its upper storey collapsed in a tragic accident, and the unsafe structure was dismantled by 1955.[12] Only the base remained, but even after demolition the neighbourhood continued to be called Ghantaghar.[4]

Conservation

[edit]

In recent decades, Delhi Town Hall’s historical importance has been recognized by heritage authorities, but its preservation has been uneven. The building is listed as a heritage structure (Grade A by INTACH, or Grade I under development norms), which theoretically protects its facade and design.[13] Due to decades of neglect the structure was deteriorated. Officials reported plaster erosion from water seepage, exposed reinforcing bars and crumbling interiors due to lack of maintenance.[8]

In 2010, shortly before the new Civic Centre opened, Delhi’s civic body floated the idea of turning the dilapidated Town Hall into a high-end heritage hotel, possibly with an added museum or cultural complex.[6] In late 2023, the Municipal Corporation of Delhi again moved to preserve Town Hall as a civic museum. Both the North and South MCDs announced the building would be refurbished and converted into a municipal history museum.[11]

Recognizing the emergency, conservation experts from the state archaeology department and the Archaeological Survey of India inspected the site in 2024 and recommended a comprehensive restoration plan.[6] As of 2025, Town Hall remains a protected but still endangered heritage site. The municipal authorities have announced restoration efforts, but actual work is just beginning. Conservationists note that physical repairs are urgent to prevent collapse of walls and floors.[8]

See also

[edit]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b Sharma, Tikam (10 December 2023). "MCD announces plan to transform Town Hall into Museum". The Sunday Guardian Live. Retrieved 28 June 2025.
  2. ^ "Photos: Delhi's 150-yr-old Town Hall awaits overhaul as heritage hotel". 12 July 2018. Retrieved 28 June 2025.
  3. ^ Gaynor Barton and Laurraine Malone. Old Delhi 10 Easy Walks. Rupa Publications. p. 97. ISBN 978-8171670994.
  4. ^ a b c "Clock Tower and Town Hall, Chandni Chowk, Delhi - Sarmaya". sarmaya.in. Retrieved 28 June 2025.
  5. ^ a b c "Revisiting Town Hall, once seat of local governance in the capital". The Indian Express. 4 December 2022. Retrieved 28 June 2025.
  6. ^ a b c d Pandey, Neelam (22 April 2010). "Town Hall to be turned heritage hotel". Hindustan Times. Retrieved 28 June 2025.
  7. ^ "Delhi's hall and arch of fame". The Hindu. 28 October 2002. Archived from the original on 1 July 2003. Retrieved 12 December 2013.
  8. ^ a b c d Sultan, Parvez (21 September 2024). "Crumbling Town Hall awaits restoration". The New Indian Express. Retrieved 28 June 2025.
  9. ^ a b Maheshwari, Shruti. "Town Hall". The Times of India. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 28 June 2025.
  10. ^ Mahajan, Satvika (29 October 2023). "Delhi's iconic Town Hall building lies in a shambles; plans for revamp fail to take off". The Hindu. ISSN 0971-751X. Retrieved 28 June 2025.
  11. ^ a b Sharma, Vibha (6 December 2023). "With no help forthcoming, MCD decides to turn Town Hall into its own museum". The Times of India. ISSN 0971-8257. Retrieved 28 June 2025.
  12. ^ Das, Aheli (20 March 2025). "For whom the bells toll: Delhi's rusting, forgotten clock towers". Retrieved 28 June 2025.
  13. ^ Press Trust of India. "Delhi's historic Town Hall set to regain its glory as a heritage hotel". Archived from the original on 27 June 2018. Retrieved 28 June 2025.

Further reading

[edit]
[edit]

Media related to Delhi Town Hall at Wikimedia Commons

28°39′26″N 77°13′39″E / 28.6571°N 77.2275°E / 28.6571; 77.2275